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CIO Leadership

Industry Articles

Why Decision Rights Fail Under CIOs... And The Levers That Reverse It

CIOs often hold formal decision authority that does not translate to operational control. This article examines how governance gaps, escalation bypasses, and shadow approvals erode decision rights, and identifies the structural levers that restore enforceable authority.
Scott Smeester
January 20, 2026
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Political Capital As A Power Tool… How CIOs Use Trust To Drive Outcomes

Political capital determines whether CIO decisions gain traction or stall... regardless of funding or technical merit. This article treats trust as a finite resource with observable mechanics: how it accumulates, how it depletes, and why the asymmetry between the two catches most CIOs off guard. For technology executives who depend on borrowed authority to execute, managing political capital is not optional.
Scott Smeester
January 13, 2026
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The CIO Strategic Manifesto: Risk, Capital, Velocity

Boards don’t fund technology… they fund judgment. This manifesto reframes CIO board reporting as capital allocation, focusing on risk retired, value protected, and momentum sustained. When CIOs shift from system updates to decision-ready signals, budgets stop being negotiated and start getting approved.
Scott Smeester
January 6, 2026
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Leadership Blogs

Security Strategy Starts With Deciding What You Won't Do

Brad Gorka, CISO at Veritiv, describes how nearly 30 years in information security have reinforced one principle: assess the people first, then build the program. Running lean teams across organizations of every size, he explains why the essence of security strategy is deciding what you won't do, and why the CISOs who set honest scope build teams that actually deliver.

February 18, 2026

Brad Gorka

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Saving 200 Hours Means Nothing If the Business Can't Feel It

José Manuel Rodríguez Jiménez, CIO at Metro in Portland, Oregon, explains why AI efficiency claims fall flat without a plan for the reclaimed hours. Drawing on 25 years of IT leadership across two continents, he describes how building relationships at every level of the organization, starting with frustrations rather than requirements, creates the foundation for shared ownership of technology decisions.

February 18, 2026

José Manuel Rodríguez Jiménez

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At a 225-Year-Old Manufacturer, IT Credibility Starts With Fixing One Thing

Chuck Scharnagle, CIO at Revere Copper Products, describes how he rebuilt credibility at the oldest continuous manufacturer in the United States by delivering incrementally, speaking in business outcomes, and treating IT as a customer service organization. His approach turned a department that executives openly resented into one they no longer question.

February 11, 2026

Chuck Scharnagle

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